Live Performance Archive
Rock 'n Roll saved Jesse "The Devil" Hughes' life with a little help from Josh Homme, lead singer in Queens of the Stone Age and best friend to Hughes.
(11/08/2008)
Earl Greyhound leader Matt Whyte lays out thick guitar riffs and interweaves rich resounding singing with bassist Kamara Thomas that's described as a mesmerizing vocal movement.
(01/22/2007)
Cliff Eberhardt was on the verge of ending his career after recovering from a serious car accident, but the songs kept coming and led him to record another album for Red House Records.
(05/07/2007)
Echo and the Bunnymen perform "Stormy Weather," "The Disease," and "Nothing Lasts Forever"
(11/26/2005)
From a 1,000 copies limited-release single at the start of 2005 to having their beer "borrowed" by Paul McCartney and a platinum album, Editors have done it their way and triumphed.
(01/29/2008)
After successful performances at the 2006 South by Southwest music festival, the Editors have remained in high demand while touring the United States.
(04/18/2006)
Mark Oliver Everett, the brainchild behind Eels dropped by the Current studios to perform stripped down versions of his songs.
(06/21/2005)
You have to be a rapper comfortable with yourself to have guests such as Trent Reznor and Cat Power on your CD. El-P aka El-Producto obviously doesn't feel he needs to prove his credibility.
(03/15/2007)
The band Elbow referred to themselves as "prog without the solos" and they said it without winking. In 2008 the band released their latest effort, "The Seldom Seen Kid."
(04/30/2008)
Electrelane have been together for a decade, but Verity Susman says the quartet hasn't settled into a comfortable pattern. They still find making music challenging.
(05/23/2007)
The ladies from Brighton, England joined Mary Lucia in the Current studios to talk about recording their new album with revered engineer Steve Albini and to perform some of their songs.
(08/09/2005)
Elefant perform "Uh-Oh, Hello" and "Lolita"
(02/07/2006)
Ellis is talented singer-songwriter based out of the Twin Cities with a loyal, involved fan base. So involved, in fact, that they had a large part in producing a recent live album by helping her decide the album's musical direction and which songs to include.
(01/31/2008)
It's been thirty years since The English Beat (or The Beat as they are called in the U.S.) formed in Birmingham, England in 1979. Well-known for their early-80s ska/punk hits like "Mirror in the Bathroom" and "Too Nice To Talk To," The English Beat broke up in 1983.
(04/10/2009)
Punk-pioneer Alejandro Escovedo has just released his ninth solo album earlier this year entitled "Real Animal."
(10/14/2008)